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[[Category:Magazines established in 1947]]
[[Category:Magazines established in 1947]]
[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 1952]]
[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 1952]]
[[Category:List of People Associated with Bletchley Park]]


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Revision as of 22:34, 17 May 2019

Sequence was a short-lived but influential British film journal founded in 1947 by Lindsay Anderson, Peter Ericsson,Gavin Lambert and Karel Reisz.

Anderson had returned to Oxford after his time with the army Intelligence Corps in Delhi. Ericsson was at New College, Oxford and had been a senior codebreaker at Bletchley Park during World War II. Lambert was a schoolfriend of Anderson from Cheltenham College who had dropped out of English at Magdalen College on discovering that he would have to study Middle English under C. S. Lewis, while Reisz was a chemistry graduate from Emmanuel College, Cambridge who later said "I met Lindsay Anderson on a Green Line bus. I was going to the British Film Institute to look at some film for my editing book and he was going to see Ford's The Iron Horse."[1][2][3]

Founded as the Film Society Magazine, the organ of the Oxford Film Society, in 1947, with Penelope Houston as its first editor, the journal quickly changed its name to Sequence, and produced fourteen issues between 1947 and 1952, the last few being edited by Reisz and Anderson.[1] The British Free Cinema movement, co-founded in 1956 by Lindsay Anderson, Karel Reisz, Tony Richardson and Lorenza Mazzetti, drew on the principles first expressed by the journal. Articles from Sequence by Anderson were published in Lindsay Anderson: The Collected Writings edited by Paul Ryan (London: Plexus, 2004).

References

  1. ^ a b Tom Vallance Obituary: Karel Reisz, The Independent, 28 November 2002
  2. ^ Lindsay Anderson Foundation website [https://www.lindsayanderson.com/sequence/
  3. ^ Eavesdropping on Adolph Hitler: Deciphering the daily messages in the Tunny cipher, 2013 by Ian Mayo-Smith